| 1913 - 916 sider
...murdered him in consequence. Perhaps with some braggadocio, but with more truth, he said of himself: ' I am afraid of nothing on earth, or above the earth, or under the earth, but to do wrong." He was studious by nature, longed for quiet, and solitude, and meditation. Yet he... | |
| Henry Cleveland - 1866 - 886 sider
[ Denne sides indhold er desværre begrænset. ] | |
| Richard Malcolm Johnston, William Hand Browne - 1883 - 732 sider
...himself a candidate for re-electiou. Alludiug to the taunts that he was afraid, he speaks thus : " I am afraid of nothing on earth, or above the earth, or under the i earth, but to do wrong. The path of duty I shall endeavor to travel, 1 fearing no evil, and dreading... | |
| James Fairfax McLaughlin - 1885 - 380 sider
...all men who entertain any such opinion of me, I wish to say that I was influenced by no such motive. I am afraid of nothing on earth, or above the earth, or under the earth, except to do wrong — the path of duty I shall ever endeavor to travel, ' fearing no evil,' and dreading no consequences.... | |
| 1998 - 608 sider
[ Denne sides indhold er desværre begrænset. ] | |
| Louise Manly - 1895 - 564 sider
...is most fortunate for his fame that he died just at this time. TRUE COURAGE. (From a Speech, 1853.) I am afraid of nothing on earth, or above the earth, or under the earth, but to do wrong. The path of duty I shall endeavor to travel, fearing no evil, and dreading no consequences.... | |
| Louise Manly - 1895 - 554 sider
...is most fortunate for his fame that he died just at this time. TRUE COURAGE. (From a Spiech, 1855.) I am afraid of nothing on earth, or above the earth, or under the earth, but to do wrong. The path of duty I shall endeavor to travel, fearing no evil, and dreading no consequences.... | |
| Louise Manly - 1895 - 560 sider
...is most fortunate for his fame that he died just at this time. TRUE COURAGE. (From a Spitch, iSjS.) I am afraid of nothing on earth, or above the earth, or under the earth, but to do wrong. The path of duty I shall endeavor to travel, fearing no evil, and dreading no consequences.... | |
| Lawton Bryan Evans - 1900 - 432 sider
...representatives. EPOCH VI. Georgia in the Confederate States. CHAPTER LI. THE BEGINNING OF THE WAK. 41 1 am afraid of nothing on earth, or above the earth, or under the earth, except to do wrong. The path of duty I shall ever endeavor to travel, fearing no evil and dreading no consequences."... | |
| Mildred Lewis Rutherford - 1906 - 918 sider
...the gubernatorial term. He was brave as a lion — physically as well as morally — and often said, "I am afraid of nothing on earth, or above the earth, or under the earth, but to do wrong." He possessed one of the essential qualities for a politician and that was the faculty... | |
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